Post by account_disabled on Mar 5, 2024 21:10:42 GMT -7
Continuing with previous posts, it seems that a new culture is emerging that responds to the characteristics of this new digital environment. According to political scientist and philosopher Bhikhu Parekh: “Culture is a historically created system of sense and meaning or, what amounts to the same thing, a system of beliefs and practices around which a group of human beings understands, regulates and structures their lives individually and collectively. It is a way of both understanding and organizing human life. The understanding sought has a practical aspect, it is not purely theoretical in nature as is the case in philosophy or science. The way in which culture allows human life to be organized is not ad hoc and merely instrumental, but is based on a concrete way of conceptualizing and understanding it.” Therefore, perhaps one of the most interesting dichotomies in industrially advanced countries is represented by the values of digital natives versus digital immigrants. The second are people over 25 years old who are the producers and main consumers today. On the contrary, the consumers and next producers will be the digital natives, the first global generation of people who were born and raised immersed in these new technologies.
This approach segments a society by generations, understood as age groups that share throughout their history a set of formative experiences that distinguish them from their predecessors. This definition takes into account that the configuration of a generation responds to a multiplicity of factors that means that the mere proximity of age is not enough to consider a group as belonging to the same generation (and at the same time, every person from that group of age as a member of that generation). In general, people of a certain age group share a shared set of historical experiences from a macrosocial Industry Email List perspective. Now we all live suuld not be focused so much on a technological key, nor on the possibilities of communication, but on values and behavioral expression. Senior Ma08), returned to this analysis in his book Einstein Generation. In his opinion, people born after 1988 are part of a generation of digital natives that “has endowed them with a way of processing information that is closer to Einstein (creative and multidisciplinary) than to Newton (rational, logical and linear)". That is, certain shared elements define common principles about the vision of life, the context and, of course, the values.
The Rise of the Creative Class, said, creativity has become the great factor of economic success. In this way, a large part of the economic development of the territories responds to the ability to attract, train and maintain this brand new social class. It is largely a generational issue: experts talk about the three Ts (technology, talent and tolerance) which are nothing more than the result of demographic evolution itself. According to Cinco Días: «All creative? For future researcher Matthias Horx, the two big trends of the coming decades will be: forms of flexible work and the rise of the creative class. But the precursor of this new elite, Richard Florida, points out the risk of creating a gap between it and the rest of society, and warns that the great dilemma of the new era will be the geographical concentration of talented, highly skilled people. qualified and prepared. For his part, Thomas Beyerle believes that becoming a creative city cannot be planned because it is a process 'quite casual and subject to fashions of between 5 and 10 years, and these types of people cannot care.' However, Beyerle is in favor of investments in key urban projects and mentions the impact of the Guggenheim for Bilbao and the '92 Olympic Games for Barcelona.
This approach segments a society by generations, understood as age groups that share throughout their history a set of formative experiences that distinguish them from their predecessors. This definition takes into account that the configuration of a generation responds to a multiplicity of factors that means that the mere proximity of age is not enough to consider a group as belonging to the same generation (and at the same time, every person from that group of age as a member of that generation). In general, people of a certain age group share a shared set of historical experiences from a macrosocial Industry Email List perspective. Now we all live suuld not be focused so much on a technological key, nor on the possibilities of communication, but on values and behavioral expression. Senior Ma08), returned to this analysis in his book Einstein Generation. In his opinion, people born after 1988 are part of a generation of digital natives that “has endowed them with a way of processing information that is closer to Einstein (creative and multidisciplinary) than to Newton (rational, logical and linear)". That is, certain shared elements define common principles about the vision of life, the context and, of course, the values.
The Rise of the Creative Class, said, creativity has become the great factor of economic success. In this way, a large part of the economic development of the territories responds to the ability to attract, train and maintain this brand new social class. It is largely a generational issue: experts talk about the three Ts (technology, talent and tolerance) which are nothing more than the result of demographic evolution itself. According to Cinco Días: «All creative? For future researcher Matthias Horx, the two big trends of the coming decades will be: forms of flexible work and the rise of the creative class. But the precursor of this new elite, Richard Florida, points out the risk of creating a gap between it and the rest of society, and warns that the great dilemma of the new era will be the geographical concentration of talented, highly skilled people. qualified and prepared. For his part, Thomas Beyerle believes that becoming a creative city cannot be planned because it is a process 'quite casual and subject to fashions of between 5 and 10 years, and these types of people cannot care.' However, Beyerle is in favor of investments in key urban projects and mentions the impact of the Guggenheim for Bilbao and the '92 Olympic Games for Barcelona.